If you want to take single photos of the night sky with the stars appearing as points rather than trails then you won't need anything other than a tripod. You could get away with resting the camera on any solid surface and pointing it skywards, but that would really limit what you could take. A tripod makes it much easier to select an area of the sky and perhaps get some foreground in, and it has other photographic uses too. The maximum shutter speed of your camera is 30 seconds which, if you are using the kit lens, is longer than you'll be able to use for this sort of shot.
The calculation Jan mentions is often referred to as the 500 rule and is
Max exposure in seconds before the images of stars start to form trails = 500/(the focal length of the lens x crop factor of the camera).
'Rule' is a misnomer because, as mentioned above, how fast the stars appear to move depends whereabouts in the sky they are, but it is a reasonable starting point.
I'm guessing the crop factor of your camera is 1.6, so the 500 rule would suggest a maximum exposure, with a lens of 18mm, of about 17s -- 500/(18 x 1.6) = 17.3. Its a matter of trying it and checking the results.
I don't know if you have the 18-55mm kit lens with your camera but if so, then you'll be able to record stars. As noted, a faster lens of 2.8 or 1.4 would make things easier but the kit lens will pick up quite a few stars and the MW at an ISO of 3200.
Dave